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My North Creek Nurseries Wish List

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Aster 'Wood's Blue'
Aster 'Wood's Blue'
Common Name: aster

This member of the Wood's Aster group has the typical low rounded habit and profuse blooming associated with all three. 'Wood's Blue' has perfectly clean foliage, and in the early fall it is covered with clear, medium blue flowers with gold centers. Bred for compact habit, long bloom period and heavy flowering, all of the Wood's Asters are outstanding pot crops and should be used far more often as a sturdy perennial alternative for mums.

Height: 12-15 Inches
Spread: 12-24 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 5-8

Aster novae-angliae 'Pink Crush'
Aster novae-angliae 'Pink Crush'
Common Name: New England Aster

A dark pink fall-blooming aster with a tidy habit and smothered in flowers? Oh man, we think we may have developed a crush. A 'Pink Crush' that is. An introduction from Walters Gardens, this New England aster is a shorter variety that doesn't splay in the late season like other aster cultivars. 

Height: 20-24 Inches
Spread: 34-38 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 3-8

Athyrium filix-femina
Athyrium filix-femina
Common Name: lady fern

Handsome crowns of feathery fronds are typical of this genus. Delicate and lacy with arching fronds and dark red stems at maturity. Strong-growing and dependable, lady ferns are great garden plants. Tough and easy to grow, this beauty is the right choice for perennial borders and woodlands alike. A breathtaking flush of new fronds appears in the spring, with new leaves appearing throughout the season for a continuously fresh look. Found in swamps, thickets and damp woods east of the Rockies.

Height: 24-48 Inches
Spread: 24-36 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 4-8

Baptisia alba var. macrophylla
Baptisia alba var. macrophylla
Common Name: white false indigo

A tall and lovely prairie native with long spikes of pure white flowers from May to Mid-June.  Easy and long-lived, it is native from New York to Minnesota, Texas to Mississippi.

Height: 2-4 ft
Spread: 24-30 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 4-8

Calamagrostis brachytricha
Calamagrostis brachytricha
Common Name: Korean feather reed grass

Calamagrostis brachytricha is a clump-forming grass with bright green leaves reaching about 2 feet. In late summer blooms emerge with a pink tint and reach 3 to 4 feet. The feathery flowers fade to cream in fall and finish in a straw color in winter. A graceful addition to the shade or part shade garden! One of the few flowering grasses that is happy in the shade. Wonderful for cut flowers.

Height: 3 Feet
Spread: 3 Feet
USDA Hardiness Zone: 4-9

Chelone glabra
Chelone glabra
Common Name: turtlehead

Spikes of elegant white flowers top shiny green foliage in late summer and early fall. Grows best in moist meadows, stream banks, and swamps. Favorite breeding site for the Baltimore Checkerspot Butterfly.

Height: 2-4 Feet
Spread: 1-3 Feet
USDA Hardiness Zone: 4-8

Deschampsia cespitosa 'Goldtau'
Deschampsia cespitosa 'Goldtau'
Common Name: tufted hairgrass

Selected for deep, dark-green foliage, late blooming period, clump-forming habit and airy, golden-yellow flowers that emerge in June and last through to September. Attractive seed heads persist through winter. An eye catching cool season, semi-evergreen ornamental grass perfectly suited for part sun to shade.

Height: 12-24 Inches
Spread: 24-30 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 4-9

Geranium maculatum 'Espresso'
Geranium maculatum 'Espresso'
Common Name: cranesbill

We are very excited to offer our own selection from the woods of Landenberg! Pale lavender-pink flowers over very attractive maroon-purple foliage. A bold new look for our native cranesbill, useful as a groundcover or shade garden feature plant. G. maculatum is found naturally in open woods, clearings, woods edges and roadsides throughout the Eastern US.

Height: 8-12 Inches
Spread: 12-18 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 4-8

Helianthus salicifolius 'First Light'
Helianthus salicifolius 'First Light'
Common Name: willowleaf sunflower

An explosion of golden yellow flowers combined with a manageable height makes this a superior selection. Despite its name, this plant can be found literally blanketed in flowers in the late summer and into the fall when most other Helianthus are past. Flowers form on upright, self-supporting stems but instead of the typical tall sunflower, Helianthus 'First Light' forms a nice, compact clump of fuzzy, linear leaves topping out just above 3 feet.

Height: 3-4 Feet
Spread: 2-3 Feet
USDA Hardiness Zone: 5-9

Hypericum calycinum
Hypericum calycinum
Common Name: St. John's wort

A widely used and attractive evergreen groundcover which is dense, but not invasive. Deep green, oval leaves and 2" gold flowers with pincushion-like, center-clustered stamens in late spring and early summer. One of the nicest groundcovers when in bloom. Most content in cooler areas away from drying winter winds, although quite tough once established.

Height: 15-18 Inches
Spread: 24 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 5-7

Juncus tenuis
Juncus tenuis
Common Name: path rush

This durable native cool-season rush is deer-resistant and semi-evergreen. Perfect for everything from diminutive filler for rain gardens, as a groundcover, and for erosion control.

Height: 1-2 Feet
Spread: 6-24 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 2-9

Lonicera sempervirens
Lonicera sempervirens
Common Name: trumpet honeysuckle

The sweetly-scented tubular red flowers of this native honeysuckle often attract hummingbirds to the garden throughout the summer. Flowers are followed by bright red fruit, attractive to birds. A twining vine, it needs a trellis or fence for support.

Height: 10-20 Feet
Spread: 1-6 Feet
USDA Hardiness Zone: 4-9

Monarda 'Gardenview Scarlet'
Monarda 'Gardenview Scarlet'
Common Name: beebalm

'Gardenview Scarlet' is one of the most mildew resistant Monarda varieties available. A classic variety that is well-earned, it's rose-red flowers sit on stems rising to 3' tall. Blooming from June to August, this long-flowering Monarda is beautiful, especially when massed in drifts to attract butterflies, bees, and hummingbirds. 

Height: 2-3 Feet
Spread: 1-2 Feet
USDA Hardiness Zone: 3-8

Oenothera fruticosa
Oenothera fruticosa
Common Name: sundrops

A tough and reliable perennial, well-suited to hot dry sites. The stems of Oenothera fruticosa are thin, hairy, and reddish with similar leaves. The buds begin as red but open into beautiful bright yellow flowers in early summer. Easy, dependable, a strong grower that can spread a bit, particularly in sandy soils. Great color for a meadow! Native to dry soil, open fields, and open woods from Nova Scotia to Florida.

Height: 15-24 Inches
Spread: 3 Feet
USDA Hardiness Zone: 4-9

Rudbeckia maxima
Rudbeckia maxima
Common Name: great coneflower

Huge powder-blue leaves make up 2' to 3' of basal foliage that is effective all during the growing season. In June and July, towering flower spikes explode with large, deep gold, drooping ray flowers with a black center. A must-have for the butterfly and bird lover! Reliable and deer proof.

Height: 6-7 Feet
Spread: 3 Feet
USDA Hardiness Zone: 5-8

Sedum SunSparkler® 'Cherry Tart'
Sedum SunSparkler® 'Cherry Tart'
Common Name: stonecrop

We’re thrilled to offer Chris Hansen’s breakthrough new Sunsparkler® series! Selected for compact growth habit, attractive foliage, large flower heads, and brilliant bloom color…'Cherry Tart' does not disappoint! Masses of brilliant pink, 5" diameter flower clusters explode above cherry-red leaves from late summer into early autumn. Perfect for the landscape or container garden.

Height: 6 Inches
Spread: 18 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 4-9

Solidago graminifolia
Solidago graminifolia
Common Name: flat-top goldenrod

Fine-textured linear foliage and golden flat-topped inflorescences in late summer. Cherished by butterflies and preying mantises and well as the wildflower enthusiast.

Height: 3-4 Feet
Spread: 1-2 Feet
USDA Hardiness Zone: 3-9

Stachys 'Silver Carpet'
Stachys 'Silver Carpet'
Common Name: lamb's ears
This cultivar features smaller leaves and finer texture than 'Helene von Stein', and seldom blooms. Silky hairs cover the leaves, giving them a very silvery appearance overall. Great for hot, dry locations.
Height: 12 Inches
Spread: 12-18 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 4-9

Tricyrtis formosana 'Samurai'
Tricyrtis formosana 'Samurai'
Common Name: toadlily

One of the few varieties of Tricyrtis with variegated leaves that is a good, tough garden plant with clean foliage! Green leaves with creamy, almost gold edges are topped in fall with lily-like flowers of purple with dark purple spotting with yellow throats. Best admired from close by, it is lovely planted near a patio or sitting area mixed with other shade perennials.

Height: 12-18 Inches
Spread: 12-18 Inches
USDA Hardiness Zone: 5-8